The daily Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh [Pa.]) 1863-1866, January 09, 1865, Image 1

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    47.
..zl 4 g..tlttobut.ot 0'i44:41,0.,
L:VERY NEWS .
By - TELOUPII. :
;WA f 11~7Ga ?Ois .
„,
1 LARGE INIM 1 11,11TiNtE nr,GBIETS.
LidiIIf , PIOTOSED -41 M- TO swamp.
itTheiinaNNlUrtaTiWit Sari TO ENGLAND.
Evidence is Regard to the Red River
Expetlition 4 s -
v A,,,appc4WPttOV t gacitimPoVip.*A
,t;
BOUM Purebased for lfr& Gen, Grant
the.Wadow, of Oen.Birney.
FAIRAGIN IN ITASIIINGTON.
.• .
pen. Frcinont-end the lereneh, MI eIog:"
.. ,:. : 1611110141 Dpat;ors To AOOO3IPi3T
tif
OE FRiaiT MEDAL
.
~,,i3plien on of Georgia to Come
l.- ; into the Union.. , •
I
. t '1 .40111 1 1,1111
, S' PROMOTIONS••SENT INTO
•.- :-, • • TIIR SEIM
bill tteconstmeliela of States. •
t
.1" ; •
. ,CAMPM4I4IIfOinIarIIICALI3:IIRTSIIPPES.
Mist of*noorne Taiables to be Pabltel.e. d.
toint, Jan. I:.—The CsormertieVi Wash
ington sreci , l says thatch!receipts of the
tcrual.Rercnne since the beginning of the year
"Les bee P -. O . v 4 4.19 .000,00 0 -
-Ills igatartntnat. the rebel ureittary of War
.
sent io the elder Blair to visit Rich
- inond, bat it did 'Dot- reach him beton he left
'Nair Tons; Washington letter
5531: . Th17 entlre = lot of cotton eairteircd at Bs.
"v - annals will beabipped to England. , The clams
of English' tnniera are to be =nailed and judged
upon by3tr. Draperaovernment agent it Baran : .
nab; and. that 'Savannah will be infmediateiy.
opened as a Dort of entry.
The same letter says the re relsani preparing
to detach a force from Lee's army_to operate
, „against Sherman: on the supposition that Grant
cart .be -hold ~14 chock by &Entail fortis for the,
p nesont. ' ' •
The Worters.Wasbhrgten special sirs: Geo..
Franklin was etandoed today by the Committee
on thecceorduct of War, in - regard to the Red
Rlye e aw kr' '' PATO etthAkistory of th at
affair, her, tth his participation. •
Admiral Porpr. kilo be. sham:l63lW before the
Committee'"on- th e -Paaaartsaf. War to give his
evidence on the Red rivereampalgo; and the part
he-took in
-. Their wasf considerable firing Dutch Gap .
- I , Genal 'oar On ad, otril !hut Rttssl9E the collie'
t length of the canal
Wain:l:arrow. Jan. 7.---AdMiral rarragut, In
Toectioury with Secretary Welles; visit:alba Navy
':}.Department to4lejiiind in tompany.iwith Noc.rce ,
• tary Welles.„Stiterwards paid hisrespeCts to Prot
...The American Academy ofScience, which has
been in' session here this week, ridloninel sine
E ' - ' lmisistant Secretary of War battalis ietiSgas
Secrets t 7 of Warta the absence of Mr. Stanton.
I • The RsymhZiola says Iv bas the highest author
... Hy for staling that the announcement of General
'.. Fremonthelog gipointed Minister to Yrasee, Is
. . . . .
: The Citizens of Philadelphia hart purchased a
t ' ' finely thrnished house for f 50,000, to be present
y°. ' ed to. Hrs. Geri. Grant CO a pi...raiment residence 4
• _They-have also subscribed 630,000 for the widow
• - of atwi Ci lg . Bin tfnt i t Y liti b l7l i a u n g ee h 7; tr no j a .73: 3 o r dt i"
, Parties retrentlyfrOm the South think that the
ci recent ortlcJiir in 'Richmond - Papers ob the sub
, I led of becoming a colony of foreign powers was
,ti : put forth to feel the temper of the people.. An
.1 ppinion Is impressed thattho majority of the pea• ;I pie will oppse the plan, nod prefer an uncontil,
:,, %tonal return to the Colon. Southern sympa
,,,;.
thizers says • theartkie till cause much dlscon
.
-. ~ tent and locker confidence in Jeff Davis.
haw Tomr, Jan. T. - -Gen. Sharma) says, to a
•'.. . z meet letter, that 1 00,000 amens desired to az-.
''); ; company him fn his march through Georgia, but
l -be wee unable to feed them on the march.
~ ' ..:1 ',A. Weihington special says : The gold medal,'
i . ,..., trathertzed by to be struck for General
",..I„ . _ Grant after the fall of Vlekshurg, has been tin
.... ,'-' • Jibed, and' bah reached Vfastingtsn. The' time
2.'1
-mid manner of its prestotation hairs noti yet
.., • It is imported that a list of all persons paying
.- r income taxes Is being prepared at-Washington,
e • Ned will soon be ye - Wished. The reason cash a--
.411 is the numerous Binds practised upon the
Gebvernment. A large number of pawns re
):
„, t incomes far below their apparent expenses.
t•
` , l- .The Iltrakrs Washington special contradicts
:" 1 , -' c report. that General 'Fremont lea been rip
:.e. pointed•idinister to Freon.
„,. New Tome, Jan. B.—The Times' Washington
'special says: 3t is rumored that' Gen. Sherman
.has ccramtusicatedr to the •resideat that the
;Georgia State authorities have applied to come
back Into the Union, and that &Tramp Stan
ton es vleit to Savannah in doubtless In connec
"tiOn with this subject. ~
Ile Timniays that Gone Thomas has been
undo Major General In the rvilar army eies
Gro. Fremonte resigned, dating, from his vic
tory over Hoed. 'Ellmther nominations for Sher
man, Meade and Sherldatehave been sent to,the
his known that a bill [spending in the House
;fat (meal:annex for a reconstruction of the
States, the governments of;which hare bees sub
tmW or overthrown by rebellion; thus establish
ing a rule applicable to them all. Representa
tive WHEW haallntrodneed it substitute for the
bra providing that.no i•epresntadves shall be re
delved froth any such State , until by act or joint
rresoletlon af Coxgren, approved by the Preal
`dent or passed notwithstanding his objections,
it shall ho depleted that lhe State has formed a
jhaf-loCal government, republican in form, and
entitled IC mpenentatiou in Congress. In other
words, the substitute proposes to deal with nth
_State eaparately„tm its own merits, without ca
nt:dishing earn= of readtahmlon applicable to
atlaf them:' -
1 The 'ColuMblan Typographical Society, last
tight, celehnit edits Olden anniversary. Among
rho Invited guatterwern Banker. Colfax; repro
tentatiennuftldwid, of 'Massachusetts, Brooks,
/114 Arntntgli W. Clark; Wm. Felon, chief clerk
of,_ the Naty Department; .1. 0.--Nloolay, the
rresiduit's private secretary; ex-Postmaster-
Ghneral Horatio!. hang; Alen Pettey Poore, and
otign--gerillemen who, like themselves, have a
Wooded knowledge of printing who severally
einttibbacts to the regular toasts, much to the de
llghtofr the largo assembly.
~C;~~3:i~T.
filLlt OF IDE.FIEINGTutinspir NORNISG
Quiet in Front of Petersburg > and
Riclimpnd.
4:!PLIZA SION% AT p11TC11194.1. CEASED:
_, , tsomitimcisi, - -Tem./.-4nformation trona bitY -
Point,stiMer -4ete of yeeterdej ter , the ' effect
thatLbo'lirtillery firing on Timiday morning,
wet aimed reminoltering- &rt.-. Besides
ig PK deal of damage 'to' tbe property it'
ftighteetel,the residents of the city badly. No
cosnsltiMmto: 'reported in tbo Petersburg
pOpfrr mien 2 Y'rePbed 00/. b/
eliwte./bat4cAbg no
na yemstris gala In front of !etas. .
• g4,lra is iimbiogpfieterestiranspirtmrbt front
of Riebmead..
oils-010'ns ' it Dutch - (lap Canal limos'-wand
fdr he present: bcarSely a that hat Lech awl
Wmintscrrow, Jan. letter from the Army
„mot the damos; , daed..Friday,- meg ; All to - vi ta
lepartmeat. 4sestroralo-esteinn hes pre- -
makIPI th? mdsalin.°St impaeas
• • . TE
_-
el A.
I._
,
IPA
Tlsr
- • 4'4
S3DCIESIT.
FORREST REPORTED KILLED.
Hood Dead—Price Not Dead.
•HERMAN`S POLICY AT SAVANNAH CONNATOU.
Speculationsas . to Hood and Sher-
man's Paiute Movement%
THE FIGHT - OF THE DAVIS FACTION
imoietance from Europe Given tip.
ITERATIONS AT. WILMINGTON RETIEIVD
The' High Pike of PIVVIBIOIIB.
StWQRSTIONS REMOLD PEACE BE RESTORED
Gainer Vance's Inanguraf Athiresi
A sFvERE LASHING ADMINISTERED
EVES' , OPPOSITION.
Drorbitant . Chargea for Slave •Labor
-
11136151801'1flidilitOTISPIAIZIWEISNTS seutair fp,
Plot of Union Prisoners to &ripe Discoverti.
RAID ADVANCING TOWARD SMITHFIELD
bond's Army Moving . on Tupelo.
REPORTED AT 8110EMAIEWS GAP
Rant Lasualtica at the Battle of Franklin.
PEDRItAL TILE SOUTH
Sherman Aorvis the Savannah River.
SECESH MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS.
Jell. Davis' 9rder4 to Mofitiy
IVA.lnrscrom, Tan. 7.—Richmond papers of
the 6th funitett',.the folkiwtog :
•
- .2%,-vata Von. 5.--ppatrick has crossed the
'..tiltsbetnm. bet' be IS supposed. to be on the Caw
tineadder_ the Saiannah river. • .
western vironta papera:rerart Ula; General
Forrest - Das basheen killed by one or,his own
men. 'TheNattyees hate raide a rald 431:ti the
Metals:Bc Savannah Railroad. They tore up
soma tulles or thatrack near Verona.
A private lett* airs that Gen. Price is not
iSead. 3t is .em - rently reporiad' hero that Gen.
CAMaiten, Jan. s.—No further movements of
, the enemy ate-reported to-day. fin three Is still
concentrating and assembling between Eardoo
vllle and Savannah, river: There. is no truth In
11 - telr reported advaneo on Graluonsvllle:
; 111.te reported deatha. of Generals Hood and
Forrest aro not -continued. •
From fiaytumah we learn that General Sher
'mania punning a very conciliatory policy and
has inked - it proclamation permitting planters to
bring their produce as usual, and hoLie on in
ducements:for them to do en. This looks as If
-he felt perfectly secure, and meant to make all
the fiends he could;
. . .
'The Charleston Mercury understand; thit
Sherman has given the citizens of Savannah tlf
„teen days to settle np their bank and other ac
counts whicharoto be balanced In the Canted.
irate notes. Italia be true there mill
be bat fevrepen accounts In Savannah after the
fifteen day. , truce expires. •Eve6rbodyr and
everybody's relation will be eager to square up
Gen.lfood being now safely across Tennessee
river beyond all doubt, - wo await with some In
terest for details of his Mum , movements.- Gem
Thomas Will endeavor by all practical means to
'prevent him; If pnalble, but delay him at all
events from proceeding to Charleston or any
other point in the prospective line of Shrman's
march. Whether it bo - the object of Hood to
mare , . va the defence, of Charleston' remains to
be Been. . Whatever his detenaduation, we may
'ant:6mM more severe righting between the ri
val :frtn ten of Tennes.ee. Meanwhile, Sherman's
march northward from. Savannah does not ap
pear to be making very rapid 'headway. The
.weather has been unpropitious", or other and
more Important causes have combined to Impede
:bin advance upon piarlestma.* _
HEW Tom, dan. 7.—Rehel , newspapera shots
that the fight of:the Jeff. Davis and anti... Jeff;
Daviefactlons la constantly growing more san
guinary. The lines between them are now strict
ly drawn. Thor. opposed to Davis accuse him
In the most'opert and vehentient meaner of being
the cane of alltilielr resent disasters, and they
In turn are charged by Jcff.'sorgans with destroy=
hog confidence In the ability of the Confederacy
to achieve Its Independence, presenting a full co
. forcernentof the conscription and encouraging
deertters.
The Richmond Whig, In an article on England,
says: She has no ships,that could encounter the
Yankee monitors whit any prospects of success;
and al hough she might build such, yet the probe
bitdy is that they could not cross the ocean. She
cc te,d not even break up the blockade, far less
-stud an - army and fleit hereto assist the Coated
erate States._ It is therefombardly worth while to
'think of returning to English vassalage.
The Illehmend fiispech, speaking of the hem.
baniment of Fort Fisher, ears Such atain of
shot and shell never- - .before fill upon any spat of
tbsince gunpowder MIS Invented. An Eng
lish naval officer:who *as with Sir Charles Na
-pier the r ßaltle and Sebastopol, says the fire
es iceded anything be hid tier teen.
- same paper lays: It Is a matter of eh
sclute'' imptSailbility 'for the federals to atop
block ado running Yet 'iVilailngton. lif the
acted blows off tho coast the blotkadiag fleet
to driven oil; and .11 the -wind blows-had
ward they ate compelled - to' haul
_off to n
gnat 'ilistanoe to escape the terrible aea which
dashes on the reeky coast, withoutiberbor
tl reed:rya' sall.whlle the. wholecoast Ls scarcely
(lin:died In this world for danger and:fearful op.
ptarance.. Fortunately when A strong easterly.
wind meets the ebb tide It:Is an easy matter for
a good pilot to rim a vessel directly to sea °Onto
port, but in!,B*IDY monthsi front October to
April, no blockading vessel can lie at anchor in
'safety off the Carolina toast.
Richmond &Wind has an article on the
high price of ' prorisions: It says i Beef Is six'
dollars per pound, and other things leLpropofr ,
lion, and declares Italhct 'that many poor people
are starving, •The most =nest and inartaidUleg.
appeals will not utmost them.
The'llichmond'i.gnqatrsi of the 4th has the;
Louts Napoleon might tra s4artled with'
another - pbernnenort time peace being restored :
between, the North:-and Soitth. It' oiled 'net'
be Iva - possible that a:portion - of the :troops notr.
engaged in acidly conflict might - unite - tinder the
NAPO banner and march upon an invasion' of
Mexico.' This tuggestlon is borne oat by the
history of almost all !manna, who have fought
with each other. Soldiers will fraternize in any
common enterprise. •
The .Erszetryr says: General Torbett recently
narrowly escaped etpture by Moseby's num. ._
Governor Vance, of North Carolina, concluded
his recent inaugural addreas as follow :. There
Is one great danger, against ,wideh earoestik
pray our people to be warned—illstiolon, desida
: lion divation of aerttirtteet. and eint.idatling to
civil' feuds, tomestic violence and: pdlitleal dis- '
Iturbanees, If-crushed by overwhelming num
' ? b ent on the lield of battle nears guiltless of an
- unavoidable result, but we canaurely avoid if we
,will, 'nitrite] violence and self-destruction. Let
all our movements, whether in peace or wsy, be.
lln,aoljd column, standing in line oftisttle, facing:
,onestayOnd tegethei=then Victory ti doubly Cts-'
I l' ure6 "
, Richmond papers of the dtlt contain the follow
log items_ A dlipateh front Angnsta, dated the
4tliossyer. the city of 'Savannah continues pilot.
An order had been issued not - to cut shade trees
:for fuel. Sherman proposes to bring wood by
way of the Gulf Railroad, The lith and itth
r carps are in the entrenchments, reaching from
the Savannah Aver to the Flankroad.
Ytrany. nograes who Joined. Sherman In the
country are tearing him, the roads being lined
with them. Sherman, to,leato gis no.
•Sesdral•federal'-itteameri 'are engaied• In m
inoring; ohstrietiona from the river.
I 'About" 31)3. negroes Were. sold at Augusta' on
TtiesMty at anetioni at an average of from *3,000
to S S,IOO dollars tub. - •
Serena buildings and`sol:i bales °Tama wire
Pitmen In Albany, Cis., last Tuesday, by luunn,
fever hf!sentirdy
,subilded 131}-'
fl • „
ea.:l{Lsby Smith impresitnlibacco-Pirr.
tlieuse of hla army
All yriut TOE in ite tran4fissiselppl !egicnty
PITTSBURGH. 'MONDAY, .JANUARY. 9; 1865
AN] t bet C Wert . no Innlaien ecolli of our army
The et:idlers are in fine conditlan, well el
end well fed.
Special Western Associate Press Dispatch.
Nnw Yong", Jan B.—The
special says: Jeff. Davis' recent orders to id,r.•
by Were, to take no more prisoners. Ereq
.14.orthon men, whether soldier or ciellian,fall;
ing Into his hands was to be killed. Mos. k y's
commend was to be raised to eight battalions-of
four companies each, and to beseattered through
the mountains. Signal stations were to be lo
cated on the mountaina, and a complete signal
code cstablithed.
The Richmond I+7.fg of the sth says that Gen.
' crmau has issued an order, refusing to receh'e
imyttiore tinge truce from sobortilaateotilerrs,
and declares if his boatf on the river arc tired
Into be a 111 force every citizen of Savannah to
!save immediately.
A correspondent of the Richmintd &nUsni
eetnplahting of severe taxation and the hieb cost
of subsistence says his Income Is one thOusand
two hundrlA dollars and his - tax one thousand
three hundred and - sixty-four dollars.
The .Wilmington Journal says over twenty
thousand .hells were thrown into Fort Miter In
the recent bombardment.
1 - • the. Bt. lieleva ...Ifoulasiwpiart,, announcing
rttee'll dulth, - says: Gen. ClOckerell now com
manding the Flrat Missiaalppl Brigade, In thr
Army of the Tennessee, will he promoted and
arm lo take charge of Priee's command.
TOJIE; Jan. 8.--,The Ric-import Matins( of
tbe litk&eff.:Davis' organ—has a leader handed
. TiteGofernment and the Opposition," in which
die oppositlon.recelyes a severe lashing. They
arc denounced as a factions; ill.affeeted, watch.
amain twist of malcontents; tntdneers und friends
of the North. They araTointed oin as eminent
ly barbarous to the South, and If tbay would quit
Southern territory; It would be a happy riddance.
Considering that, the &mind says thisopoosition
. Is. contemptible in numbers and dots not include
In
Its make cue single man eminent tor rirors
mad talent, ills strangithat it. devotes so long
nild marked /vatic lq it.
The Richmond....Ndiuirrr remarks- that the
rtbelthaviwnwtent should take into hand nod mu
nepolim The entire blockade running, controlling, '
all the exlortatlonn nod lutporations, the former
for3Ne Lawfit of the. re Tic and army, and the
latter far then:my alone. It would contribute
to tite utilltary defence of the country and en.
courage.habits of economy by closing the mar
lets to imported luxuries. Another vexation
tiny experience is the ceborbitant prices
forsineo labor. One thousand dollars and board
and clothing per annum is now charged for the
labor of a ni-gm man.
The Richmond Ertqnirer. urges that every store
for mhos e labor that price Ls charged be conic:tin
ed the army. as the WO pries for slave tabor
Jemarrilaes the institution of slavery. A $181)1,
eneh cue of which. is worth two coots In gold,
with board and clothing for a year's labor, is re
garded an extortion which the slave system can.
ue t admit.
The Richmond Sentinel says: Thz arrange..-
. mute matte with a Mr. I vamp, to bring beat°
Rithinund at less than fix dollars per pound,
goes not work, that he charges as muck as the
most extortionate butcher, and that some other
arrangunlynts must Do male. It'says that the
people of Richmond, a great multitu is of
whom, by the most unremltting lalior, cannot
make xine : balf the sum paid to goverutnent
clerks, are starring. This is not a Ilourith, but
a fixed tact. e
Whig is even more Dotter ou Imeam, and
says the Virginia State ornetrs arc furnished
prune toot by him at one dollar and sixty crate
Lem ! noted. •
The Lew Governor (Mngrath) of South Caro
lleo /sidled tirociasmalon calliag Upon nil
fr're width Men between the im,es of slxbmil
sitif sixty to come to the defenses of Charleston,
willingly if they wilt, forcibly IC necessary. ,
The Richmond .bionirrr snixests the hanging
of (*Ma merchanti of Wilmington, who rc
fAid to take Confederate money whlleour fleet
uns before that ally. :.
The Raleigh Confederate says the sorrernier of
the ' lnn lkserses by Ifajor Beene, 1110.11 . Fort
Fuh~r, was an act Teri damaging to lits
nrtpata
tU n.
By the Columbia &n,th Corolinfan, it Sppearit
that a number .of Union prisonets, who had
agreed to Join the rebel army to escape the rebel
prihen lee; had been discovered In a plot to es
capeto Sherntan's Liam Seven were shot and
the remainder Scat to prison.
Gen. :Gdiforti L In command of the diatrict of
Charleston. succeeding
,Gen:ltairsom. General
G. NV. Smith la in Augusta.
Major General John C. Tinavrn, Inother of Ex.
Governor- Brown, of . Tennereove, la Neoverteg:
ft. in his iround recctrol at rianklln.
.'Use Raleigh Progress saga of the lincnnka rtt.
frdr which tho rebels at first claimed ao great
a I Ictory, that it did not amount to much, no
rum bi:LoilLilled or aerionaly wounded on either
elite.' - •
The Richmond ranuirrr reports a skirmish on
tt.•e Bpriug Place road, near Dalton, Georgia, In
'which the rebels captured seventy prisoners,
seventeen barite, and forty or fifty stand or arms.
No date la given.
The Mobile Rtaiskr reports. time a steamer pose
errntly Mined, has been Just completed at that
(41v; and has taken her place In the harbor. She
ban elegance, strength, and speed.
WASUINOTON. Jan. B.=lllelimond papers or
ti:e contain the following Items: ,
Ijr, Jan. fi--A raid is reported advancing
s inward Smithfield, twenty milm north of
ivrileen. The destruction, of property is un-
L. 1.1.0.
"It is ale° reported that Gen. Hood's army has
cit., veil the Tennessee filver, - and Is moving on
Tulelo, which will probably be the future base
cf operations.
"ibe Fort Gaines prisoners are,evected to
'arrive In this city tceday. •
"Ike learn, aaya the Raleigh Cortrederete of
ae that on the °--4d of December, a fight took
plate rl Shoemaker's Gap between Captains W.
Pries It es end Gat - trellis companies and some
liVtrrtut a, tortes and robbers. They attacked our
c • from ambush, but were speedily routed and
a,ivrey chastised. They last fourteen killed, four
fonrtaken prisoners. We loot none
lo killed and wounded. The woods were fired
doting the engeament, which caused the dis
charge of a conalderable number of guns which
had teen thrown away by the enemy. Capt.
Price was in command of tha battalion, and die.
tinguitled himself by his coilnevs aid bravery,
as el I Illv entire command."
c Culambin Otro:inian .szkys : Gctt, D. 11.
hilt pne.aml down the South Carolina Ilallrond
itt:evr orders to report. to Gen. Bentirt-gard at
CII.-rleston. .
The Selma (Ala.) 12,10 nnticts the arrival at
that idaec, on the 20th 'Mita°, of a detachment
of four or fire hundred galvanized Yankees tin
der charge of Captains Clark and Rite and Ad
jutant:Seymour, of the 10th Tennessee,.on their
.Way to the front. •
*I ha' arc, says the Rad, strong, able-bodied
soldiers; mostly foreigners, embracing almost cr.
•e - e y nationality, with only a slight mixture ofthe
genuthe Yankees. Captain Clark informs ns
that almost any number could hare been ob
tained, lint only those were accepted who had
no families In the North and few tics to attach
them to tkat section. They wilt be distributed
through the Irish regiments of :the Army of the
Tennessee and fill up their depleted ranks.
WAtilitfilllON, Jan. 8.-Richmond papers of
the Gth, in addition to. wliat.wat telegrapbei last
night, have the following: • "A violent tornado
parsed over:Middle Alabama on,the 11th of De
cember, fitted:l perions,rdcmollshing a
large number of houses, and destroying the rail
road bridge on the Montgomery anti West Point
Railroad, twenty miles cast of Montgomery., Thu
amount of damage done was Imme.natt. •
At the battle of Franklin the Missouri brigade
went Into the fight 088 strong,and had 109 killed, -
242 wounded and ninotystx captured, making a
losivef 447. .GCM:Cock4rcll was wounded three
times, Lilt _not seriously. "Col. Oates was also
fro ended .. Col.tharland and Major Carter, with
Nig list of Captains and Lieutenants, were
'alum; the killed. - .• •
The Romatner said :....Yestetday a commission
from Cratit's',llues arrliod 'at Farina, under a
fag of Iruce;4lth 1500'blanket; for distribution
among the'Vedcral'prlsoners..in HlLlamond; In.
addition to-I,ooirmetitorl' latt weer: Of the
69,000 Yankee prisongra held lej tht South. not
over 2,000 are -condi:fed Je1:11101ntond; and more
UlOlll one-halt of theese are In the hospital. For a
year:past, tha great. body or them base been
sLidlug . apedie.l Illehmond Is hard pressed to
teed its superabundant population, andihe large
armies.defending Its mites, and - is relieved from
! the incubus of an overstocked prison-postJu Its
' The repOrts of Sherman's. having :crossed the,
i'detranuel are confinned.'. fie la believed to be
floviag on Graimmsville.
'QV THROWN INTO THE RIVER.
Thirty. or Forty Passengers Injurd.
, . .
Potiontstrsta, Jan. B.—A eleepiny, ear at
tached to tho train due here at noon to-day, was
:thrown- from the track at Uarniersburg's bay,
too mitre;': above Strattsburg, the car tumbling
In the 'firer. • car contained :if, or 40 Nissen.
gare..Who *email mori.or lees Injured by tha;
shock, and cut with glass by the breaking out of
the windows In endeatmring 'to' escape death
from drowning.; A brakeman named Hannay
woe badly. hurt: .A rcgtdar.passenger car Was
alto thrown - from the wnek but. did not go into
the:Vier. - Superintendent Tattiey's-Ammof man_
cleared the rubbish and thn-rasiA Is all right
again*. Tho accident was caussdby the breaking
of a wheel.
. - . ,
Luca - motive Hollef,Eakylealen.
i Nino Youx, Jan. R.—the Herald'. City Point
coorespendeno, of the. 6th b°ll6l.- of
the - locomotion C. Vlb h er d exploded on the sth,
dangerously . injuring the conductor-'Douglass
Andel - ion, or "Romellsosle, And: breagjug the .
ioillar bone of thoprgineet,Prmottor, Gray;
Llano; Oblo.
i'eIDIRIEIO.N.
Foreign Reawoilion
dent Lincoln.
BETIO VIEW OF SUBWAYS WINO
Visit to the i'otonta,c Arini of
-
• • a British Officer.
MtTet ERN STATEN LK EXHAUST I FILE.
B o ob& Blo c k a de "Rimning DeOisioll
tires Yona, Jan 7.—ln regard to the rumor
that England and France will soon denier° [.In T
role Ptesident only of the Northern States, the
Tribwm rays editorially that all foreign powers •
know officially nothing. but - the Government of
the linked States, and In "caE7ing out the re
neitMl plan would-be obliged to recognise. as In
dependent powers, all States that voted for Mc-
Clellan.
The British • Anoy sad Nam (Matte says t .
:Sherman's post ion In Atlanta befor'e the Gew
alt, campaign was a seven one. Ms comotnni
cmienti northward NITIC not seriously interfered
ith, and he was at liberty t 0 ... go where be
pleased. The capture of Savannah was not the
whole, object of the' neginni movement from
Chattanooga, and the campaign could only end
with the capture of Savannah or Mobile.
A British army officer reports in the London
Star the result of a professional visit to the Ars
my of the l'ototnac, In terms exceedingly natters
Inc to the per ror the United Ptut.m. Ito states
that be considers the NOrthern States ineximosti
/Au la men end money. The Writer furnisltos a
en and Ink do telt of Gen. Grant. Ile Astor
enal a reset - alarm of Brant to the Duke of
Wellington, and a very striking likeness of Geo.
Groot to the second son of the Duke. Ip travel
h tl,,,,asathit—of miles through tile United States
he saw t cry tittle to hull:tam the existence of a
gr,.:.t war, and nothing that gars the least alga
Ir I 4.. hill 1,4;0t1 of sirs.'
The /krttlerri.lter from Itttchoe Ayres, dated
the t'lth tilt., t.a.) t The war or Ilreztt ere Ilre
eite 'iv likely to efTert di( obliteration of the ra
t Unh to it genitive was aided by a .ztrung
h p..wer.
TI:• Tams, cditnrially , noticesillic fact that in
n n eni nit in iatndon.•whi•re a Shipper of
n. ipld mini the owner of it blockade rtinnaw for
thanuews in fulling- to falail the confluiet, the
Jo. , wcs ilcoldttl in fawn. of the plaintiff's, who
web .only cutlilial to nominal damages, be
cause -the contract was illegal and decidedly
eta-coed to Owe e'' proclamation, and having a
dirt tendency to involve the country In war.
tint docision in eustained by the. Owens tench,
it will be a set - ore blow to the blockade running
enterprise.
The Aiielrian 3firitary Joiwria! call the ad-
Y: m e or Sherman from Atlanta trneardal,van
nah "one of the most IntereAlng operationa In
military hl.tory of modern lime., and hardly
frer, iruyortant, for the air of Richmond, than
Wm Ili. X) was for l'aric.
. The London batty Trfcgraph says r Lord
'Wham -111 re should horofrelghted a fait steamer
h ortteles purettnacd olttr the proceeds of the
Livertonl Fat:, nod then run her throng :It the
Vt lintington blockade.
XIII [Mk, CONCUSS-44E1;0ND .3E88103
IV A N WrON Jan. 7, 1'4.65
MUUSR.
Mr. isthencli, fihui the Committee on Military
AlTans, reported a which was poises!,
onimiding the Div establishing en lemon Asy
lum in the District of Columbia fir navy and
atniy.mliceri so as to Lotion insino civilians of
the Durtexmaster's Deportment on the order of
Dm bummer) , of War.
)4r. litairman imeminced a pramtaln setting
forth nun the linese, In liccetntser last, adopted
a reerantien directing the Secretary of War to
furnish copies of the order Issami In December,
that remains to till uri old organizations
abeam( he mustered out of the orrice with sada
raiments, and alto directing him to furnish a
• copy of the letter adarcascd to Gov. Andrew,
and asking t he tteeraary or War to say ♦heaher
the pt triple therein contained. hod lleetta•appllel
to all 64,1,11 era muttered Into the service to fall up
old regiments; and whereas the rattail:Mica has
Oct been Compiled with: tnerefbro
.tt.ami, That the 13oenetarrof._Worbodirael,
ed tolnf.rta the Howie why the hiformatiwt has
not boon (Oro!shed, awl that ho be dtreotod to
thruioh the same.
The resolution Ara, adopted.
Mr. MorrL. of Ohio, Introduced ablll authorlz•
hut Express laud -other traneporistion companies
tn.,.•il tinclaimed freight, which wan referred to
the C'otronittee for the illvirict of Columbia.
Mr. Grldrx Introduced n bill providing that the
mother.. of Illegaimate children who die In the
otithar) vendee or fall In battle, shall be entitled
to Tre..ter ortuarat:e. of par rind Wonty the
s one rt, other mothers- Tho bill was retorted to
the Commlltel• on Military
(. 7 , ~ of Mr tin. rnolut.on
etas adopted irnaructing the Committee on the
.31ar..hry to inquire into the expediency of re
o:log a Lill no exclude the testimony of par
ties Interested stn suits where the administering
en.wiltors and guardians arc portico.
Mr. Grint7cll lutroduced a resolution Instructing
the Committee on Military Affairs to report, at
an early hour, ou the expediency of a law mean
time:le so muchof the property of centerline
1010 have failed to report for duty as trill secure
co... Sets in their stead. -
he Gouge then resumed the consideration of
the Senate resobstion proposing the amendment
of the Constitution so no to abolish slavery
thswut.hout the United States. -
Mc. lulus, of Ohio, ((poke of the Impolicy and
nowtonstltutlonallty, of amending the Consti
tution in the manner designed. The change, as
he tor.tendsl, could he made only, on the basis
of loaripromisc. The subjugation of the South
rul ewoy over it could be accomplished by no
0 too . mcana than by a standing . army, and, In
lila o;4nlon, we could not atford :the blood and
treasure widen would be required for that pttv.
Pose
Mr.-lingers ' of New York, sald there was not
the power In time Government by an net ofle
gislation to Interfere wh.li the domain of 'any
Slate to control slavery or any other institution,
the control of which woe not delegated to the
General Government. The Institution of slavery,
he reps:Ara, belonged to the Stale, and no nom.
bloat hot of men can, by legislative enactment,
it therein.
Mr. Davis, of New York, sold that the emu
meht of Mr. Rogers was that civil liberty eon
shi efl in the tight of one people to enslave an
other. So far from this being true, nature made
ell nun free, and entitled them to equal rights
beft:re the low; and upon this principle the Gov
erment must stand, and sooner or later it will
ho tmrecor,mizell principle throughout the world.
Sla)ery should find no apologist and defender
suurng those whe represent the Free States ; and
shivery should dice because It is Incompatible
with freedom, and has undcgakou to destroy oar
Government and subvert opt Institutions. He
would ask the South to rum h back Irk& big in--
stitutiona, became freedotu only could mak° the
. Union perpetual. I •
Mr. Higbee, of California,' in Ida speech, said
that the people, by 'a maJotity of 400,000 votes
at the late 'l'rmidenfird elerthini had, endorsed
the emancipation policy. The Senate, at the
last session, passed the Joint• rrsolgtlon now un.
der dlstuselon by more than n three fourths DM
joiikii • althongh of taco
not obtsinta for' It In the Homo; there wana ma
jority of thirty more than Ihnn ' who - voted;
against it. Ho alluded to.thesci and other facts
to show that the duty of Congress was dear and
well underttood by the nation.
nO , JiableY, at Ohlb, gave,sOtles liu. he
'would, on Monday or Tuesday. ask n vote on the
!pending proposition.
• The,House then adjourned. . •
New York Bteek.suld. Meaty Markets.
Special Western Associate Press 'Seasick. •
Yale froate, Jan. 7.-4peenlatlve Interest upon
:stocks is dull, except upon Erie, which still Is
- -borne dotrribfa strobg Inmr combination. The
taarkr.tAr:getlerall:f drat, except upon Northwes.•
tem shares., -Government stocks were all strong
and better at inf. with large business • subset,-
ions In the city have been *IS ,000,006; of Which
*the lit National Bank took *5,000,000: 'State
Swam quiet and Brio; miscelaneonslist steady,
without marked change. Coal shares firmer.
The Gold market has beentenvy, with a grad
'nal fall in pure. There'arn no ne xa or rumors to
anent the market. • Money leas entire ; a better
supply of capital on per rent - -
At Petroleum Board, stocks quiet and steads'.
Sales of• Excelsior at en ;:filghgate, 105 ; Noith-
American $8; Tack Petrolettin, 350; Buchanan
Term, 195.
Petroleum Is quiet, at Ole for crude, 7:1 1 374e
for refined bond s - and ossotc - fot• refined . free.,
. ,
lee onth e uebanna-. Yvan' Delayed.;
Stesq,
Jan. B.—Tito leo la the Bitagtte;
henna. - seriously °Weide! -the trains_ on the
Philad elphio Rallroadleaterday roondrig.- !Mak
did not gclairoughrtill ioie thlsofernieg; The
New York papers of yeatenlay - ware' notr-ti
t cited till alvo'elock this evening'. '• Tho,tralsf.
from here yeatetdayaftentoon had to rtturn, and
Indus did. eat go out:, Treble, hogerieroretn•
eel.tanight'.
,ulrwd, Ith s prospeet_of *get
ting through In good Beaton. - •
Ald;tbr..l3lstreised Saveadashette:
Paruttortrtas;.3gia:. iiocttni alba - eft:
ii(Mti Is callaffor nuisditipeal.,to 'take muet'.
ores to . allerrlato the distress or the parboil
sassursh.
lial3l - 11Ni4,1- - r N
WHAT FORTED WAS EXPF,CTED Ti DO.
Not One of Our Men inside the Fort.
STATEMENTS OF REBEL DESERTERS
NEW YORK, Jan. B.—The military authorities
expected. Porter would run the gauntlet and get
in the rear of the fort on Cape Fear ricer, thus
cutting the fort off from Wilmington. When
on the ground the Admiral was requested to do
this, but refused. The flag that - was captn led
was taken from the ditch outside of the fort by
a brace officer, and the dispatch bearer was shot
% one-till:lief a mile front the fort. Net one of
our men . got Inside the fort or any of its de
fenses. While the transports were awaiting for
lt
the wo . the first three days, the rebels sent
down einforcements to Sugar Loaf Camp,
In they y of the fort, end the reinforcements
: were reatlY to assist the fort in case of attack.
• New Yore, Jan. 7.—A correspondent of - the
;Philadelphia Inqufrer, writing from Fortrese
:Philadelphia
Jan. sth. says: Several rebels de.
"named from. Pert Fisher a few days since and
COMP off to our gunP.eats. • They say there Were
.only 300 men In the fort daring the first day of
the attack, bet that 6,000 reinforcements reached
the Paton the 37th. Ire says the rebels lost 13
.hilltil'atid SO Wounded during the bombardment.
Your nuns have bean taken down from,Wilming
dion to replaen those disabled. . .
NMMV C:031=1.Z.23E1ALT073.
E 4,000,000 for the Disbursing Officers;
SLNDAY ORDER OF GEN. HURLBUT
17,K SfeaFact' R. E. iee !Irrlrckid.
El=
C lila , . Jan 7.—The steamer. henry Ames,
from New Orleans on the tit at ult., arrived with
a moil for the north, thirty-four tiller of cotton
for St. Louis and -thirty for Cincinnati.
The stramkltip Creole,from New York, had ar
t-I-Ned: also the naval transport kinlou, with 14:
ttoo,(ko for the disbursing cancers in Now Or
kens.
Gen- Hurlbut fanned an order prohibitingnffl
erra und soldiers from attending the, theatre,
billiard rooina and other places of ammement
rot Bundey,Mmouncing the habit- as diahonor
able and onntrary to the duties which soldiers
one thenmelvcs and their country.
Col. J. Dante, of the First Louisiana cavalry,
Is nfpointed Brigadier General and ordered to
report to Gen. Canby.
Matamoros rapers give nn account of tho
n red: of the creamer It. E. Lee, from
filatomorm,olf.tha mouth of:the Rio ((rondo in a
N.A. Of the crews were drowned and tho
(Allem wracked up on cotton balm by the French
bark Cotillions, from Ilorima. They atm no
tice the deetrntition of nix hundred hales of cot
ton victiging to the inerchants of Matamoros.
litiddlinc.cotton Is yelling at 39aa39e; enutxed
sugar I tiM I se; mnlivary brown 9010 c. There Is
but little tn.ml7 fur cotton. New Orleans flour la
Atm nt an oilvithee.
rsios RAIDS IN LOUDON COUNTY
Considerable Property Destroyed and
carried Away.
VA TEA GUARTPIS ERECTING AT LOVETTESVRLE
WASIIIM:7I/K, Am. B.—A letter from Loudon
county, Va., dated the ad, says : A cavalry force
from Gen. Bhorldon'sanny visited the neighbor
hood Of UV /40D. sad Middleburg, on the 97th
ult., sod destroyed and carried away a consider
able amenutocropeny belonging to the sects-
Monists, of t .klf4eh, , bborhood. ' •
; A fesirdaytTafF67:lOther trarypofthiltar
ry entered the county from Fairfax - and
f aiths
several arrtala of diatoyal residents.
A bripale of cavalry and artillery has been
stationed. near Lovettsville. Gen. Davin is in
command of the brigade. Winter quarters are
being erected, and it is probable this force will
remain In the vicinity of Lovettaville'during the
winter.
ARRIVAL OF SEMMES IN RICHMOND.
Efforts to Exchange Editors.
New Toms, Jnn. u.—The Tramne'r Army of
the James special of th, lld says : The plrato
Semmes has lirrlved In Richmond. Great suffer-
Mg exists In Richmond on account of the scarci
ty of food mid fuel, oning to the bad condition
of the mad.. Lee's ermy is now reviving re
dui ed rations.
Pollard, or MP Richmond RA:miner Ls at Bet
tor', headquarters, and Is to be permitted to go
to Richmond to endeavor to secure as ex
change for Itiehardson, of the Tribune, captured
rsfeniy months ago. nets on parole to return
If he cannot secure the proposed exchange.
311stourl lA:glAlature—Organization of the
Con4ltutional Convention,
Sr. Loins, Jan. B.—The Constitutional Con
vention effected n permanent organization yes
terday by the election of Col. Arnold Kretchell,
of St. Charles connty, as president; Charles I).
Drake, of St. Louis vice president, and )14. A.
11. Foster, of Franklin county, secretary.
The State Senate yesterday . passol a joint res
olution for the appointment of a committee to
memorialize the Secretary of War to establish a
garrison of protcctlon near the southwest por
tion of the state.
Both houses passed a hill authorizing the Board
of Public E , chools to provide for the education of
colored children in thla city. the present law for
bidding the Caine. 0.
Aubscrlptions to the GOvernment Loans.
West:mows; Jan. 7.—The subscriptions to
the loans yesterday, as monied at the Treasury
Dtpartment, were es follows: To the 1040 loan,
Il2,460,000; to the 7-V0 loan, 01,030.640.
Nr.l. Tons, Jan. B.—Tha subscriptions to the
1040 loan yesterday amounted to 04,100,000,
and to the lone nearly $1,000,000.
Arrival of the Golden Italy.
Nrw Form, Jan. stennter Golden
Rule, from Greytown, with dates to the UCith,
attired this evening.
Balkely and party, of the. Russian' .tele
graph expedition, reached GreytOwn in saran
en tads for San Francisco.
The Golden Rule brings.6oo passengept.
The - St. Albans Raiders and Canadian
Special Western Associated Press Dispatch
. New Tom:, Jan. ' 8.- - The. /Arab/ 'says. ledi
tortoni; that tbolawof .reprisola.wllt knotty oar
, seleing the property of Canadians In the United
States to Indemnify the At. ,Albans banked 1f the
rald.ers nail* are not given up. .-
Plze""at B • oston. .
.
BOSTOI.I, Janj.—Tbo largo stonelmildlngorti
ilia southeast corner of State and Washlostst
.stiects, was badly gutted by tiro early this morn
ing. The lower dom. was vacant., The second
floor wee ocenpled 'principally by °Oleo. The
, occurants do not loan much, the Owner's loss
being tiro
'Raft igees'aiid flrnhanas lions Little Rock.
•
CAIRO, Jan. B.,—The steam6r.Lockwood. from
Little Rock, arrived here to•ddy with five lum
iired"refugees and lift* orphans in a very desti
tute condition.. Many of them are sick, and
several died while on the way. Three other
boat loads aracomiug.: •
Alexlean ,41raics•
NEW 7 . 01111,4rtt1. B.—Adyiees frorn htexleo say
that since the captureof hlazatlan by thn French,.
the 'Juarez Government has no, seaport on the
raeltle coast. The Imperlal.Governmentis net,:
Irely engaged In putting down *guerrilla opera-.
Gone and establishing order: . - •
Excliango of
,Pirlsopen
Formulas Mosuon, Jan G.-PIA BALTIMOILII,
Jan. S.—Tiro exchange of pnisonetts has 'again
been resume& Col; Mulford are.fed frontlFash
lugton yesterday and let forNaritus on the &sines
river wills fifty rebel officers.
“Dratd“ Arrayted for Dialoyalpb
BAvrimmuc o tan.B.--"ltetiry bt:Fltoi;("Iftld".)
corrispondent of MI6 New York .-Wortd, baa been
arrested bevel by the ',military
now
'pa
l bar q ° '.IIO4IYIC. li e now 41,04ta1A
WILSON—On Ratittiar aterattliOth
JAMES - W LPSOrt. Ned Ste yenta. •
The tel►t eeaped Leteads.ar the fatally are Ir.
Oectrally Invited to attoodthe fueeratoil
manta:fa; ■t 9 o'clock, from the, reeldehit
lather, Allekhaay Street, Ntnth wart - 481
EVErilliG GAZETTE TELEGRAMS.
t`i=?_4l=l.l%M ri.".3El NIV-E51193EM.
THE CAMPAIGN ENDED
The Last of llood's Army Across the
Tennessee.
OFFICIAL LIST OF PRISONERS CAPTURED
A NEW CAMPAIGN PROJECTED
The Corps of Wood. Smith and Schofield
Already Moving.
THE WILMINGTON EXPEDITION
Nsvr Yonx, Jan. T.—The Times has a special
dated Huntsville, Ala., which says the cam
paign Is ended.
The last of Hood's army crossed the Tennes
see river on the 29th, with 8 pieces of artillery
'and about 18,060 -men. Ho left Macon with
85,000, and was reinforced 5,000, and had 110
,pleces of artillery.
After the battle of Nashville both armies floun
dered hi the mud for ten days. Hood's remnant
of infantry crawled off at night, Lls cavalry stub
barely resisting pursuit during the day. It In
believed Hood has burled or thrown to thesriver
at least thirty - guns. He abandoned u large-slum
ber of wagons and ambnlanci.%.
Our official list of prisoners numbers 9,700,
not including 500 captured from. ltoddy, on
the 27th. Over 000 deserters have also reported.
It is said that Hood is going to 'Meridian,
Miss., to attempt a reorganization. The chase,
in force, has been abandoned, although Side&
man Is across the river, with orders to to harass
him, and rapture as much as possible.
A new campamn has been already projected,
and the eorps,of Wood, Smith, and Schofield are
already moving.
The Fri-Notes Norfolk correspondent says of
the Wilmington expedition, that the transports
were on' Fort Fisher three (lays before the war
skips arrived, in Coot]. weather, and the enemy
was known to be in eint-11 force; that their coal
WOO exhausted, and they had to return to Beau
fort, leaving again as soon as possible;
that without waiting for their retairn as
agreed, Porter explodol the povider-bOat and
opened Ore: that the troops were to land
when the powder-boat was exploded, and take
advantage of the shock produced, and that when
the troops did land Welled found the fort un
injured and an assaulting party would meet a
more bloody repulse than at Fort-Wa ; ner.• lie
advised a withdrawal; to which Butilr assented.
LATE NEWS FROM RIOEMEOND.
LEE TO COMMAND ALL TILE EEBEL ARMIES
Reaureaard in Command of the
Defense& of Richmond.
LEE GOING TO SOUTH CAROLINA TO
CHECKMATE SHER MA N.
Nits, Tons, Jan. 7.—The World's Washing-
Ineton correspondent, of the lot, says that it Is
rumored there that Lee had been placed in com-
Mend 'or all the rebel armies, and had put Bean
regard in ',command of all the defenses of Rich
mond, Intending himself to proceed to South
Carolina to concentrate the rebel forces In that
, : quarter to check Sherman's proposed movement
northwanl.
Shaman's movement was considered of more
Interest - than any Greatest" make upon Richmond
in four mewls.
The Velltnlogted eornstpondent of the Rich
mond ALipettch says that our forces were at one
tuna between Foi t Fisher and Wilmington, cut
ting oft communkation both by laud nod water.
If they bad not been dislodged noon, Fort Fish
er would have fallen as Fort Morgan did, and
with lts fall the fate of Wilmington would have
been sealed.
The Met:mond Sentinel says tho North Is
becoming bankrupt, by which - the South Is
sure to Kale. her. Independence.
FROM sanzwr
RESTRICTIONS-UPON TRADE REMOVED
Gov. Bramlette's Message
CINCINNATI, Jan. 7.—About twelve Inches of
snow fell last. night, Interrupting railroad corn
na
General Burbridge has removed tho restrictions
upon tradein Kentucky.
Itevolutions were Introduced In both Hennes of
the Kentucky Legislature yesterday, declaring
for an immediate abolition of slavery. •
Gov. Bramlette, in his message, recommends
gradual emancipation and the ultimate removal
of the •laves; rejoices over and thanks Sherman
nit Thomas for their victories; denounces the
arsci4 of Col. Wolford and Lieut. Gov. Jacobs;
am 3 his object In attemptliv. ° to regulate the en
list inent of slaves was not to save the institu
tion, but the people of*entucky from naneees-'
sary burden In its accomplishment. Kentucky
has fornlabal nearly 7ti,ocr4 soldiers to the Uni
ted Motes 'army.•
•
Guerrilla Ope'rations in Kentucky.
A TRAIN CAPTURED AND BURNED.
Discharged Soldiers Brutally Murdered
Loctscrux, Jan. 7.—J. Walker Taylor's rebel,
forms occupied Owensburg till Friday, conscript
ing citizens and firing upon steamers, when they
left. The . New Albany Leper say ' rebel guer
rillas have possession of Owensboro,l
Hawesville,
Clererport and Henderson.
The Lebanon train was captured by a hand of
3fagrader's guerrillati, near Lebanon' Junetton,
ye,terdayaftemoon. Thepassengcrs wen:Jobbed
and the cars burned. The rebels brutally mur
dered four discharged soldiers of the 15th Ken
tucky regiment, ..
.Taylor has established his headquartme at
Hawesville, IMO citizens are Acting aerate the
Ohio to aiold consCription.
~
GEORGIA AND SOUTH CAROLINA.
Gen, Foster's Expedition Reinforced.
SHERMAN PROBABLY AWN MARCHING.
NF.W Tenn', Jan. 7.-7hc Charleston .3Tvreur:y
of thck . ,2lst,.. says: §hcrman reinforced
Foster's expedition. against the Charleston and
Savannah W.road. •
- -
The Angoras Register of the Ist eetitirms'thla
`Tepart, saying Yosterts batteries kayo been In
!creased. . . .
The ' Rlchnionill •of the` 411 i says it
will not be surprisadnt any moment to learn that
iiherniart is on the March.
The &Mimi urges modification of the:rail
road system In .Georgia and - South. Carolina.
The lines tour ran just where they 'shouldnot,
that is,theY are, too close to Shen:ann.'s anny,hnd
nettle latter cannot be moved, the former ought
FRONC THE' S.HENANDOAEC
MyEterloo Movementa of the Rebels Reported
NENrY9int, , Tria, .ffirdirr fiheriandoith
euricapondent says flume, aro rumors In circula
tion In that= egimi which It 11not properto pub;
Usti, that the rebels • are engaged in come very
ruysterlons tallltary.morements. . •
From..Meiaphb...The Expedition .to. Do
. atroy the Mobße - and Ohlo Railroad.
.
Muttrirts,, Jan. 5, vta,Callto,
Dana bits received Mietmation from his rarefy
force sent out from • here on the Blot of Deeem',
ber. Th 4 atritek the Mobile and OMo Railroad
fire mllea below Dorhathwand had, on the 27th,
utteity.deatioyed It to below Okalona. : Twenty-.
nlnd bridges, a great deal of trestle . work, thirty
tiro railroad cars; thie6 hundred arm wa g ons
d . ca
and .fouri thousanrbines wore destroyed,
Forrest'seartrp of dismounted metratiPerona dis
persed tind'idx 'officers Ind twenty men captured,"
the expedltion , notioatngli man. - Gen, - daemon
hoe coders to destiny as far, as Myldlan;
ankh! rule:ran our Itahatnera at Catawba ir *awl
bley
-- .
the Dade of St;,A11410:/31,19•0*,
donwdailadd cOdsv
that It he Jurisdiction in the ciao of the St. AI
bane raiders, and the ease will proceed. • .
CITY AND SUBURBAN.
!tall way Oast oqe
It will be n source of gratilintion, particularly
to the Lusincss community, to learn that the
railway postal system is being adopted, and will,
nadoulnctliy, soon be put In general use over all
the more impe;rtant mail routes. The principal
featurt In this new system consists in distribu
ting, while idtrannitu on the cats, the mail mat
tcr for . the different points, thereby avoiding clic
&goy occosioned by stopping at post officlts on
the route, for distribution. small agent will be
put upon each route, and clerks - will accompany
all malls for the purpose of distributing them.
Not only-arc distributions made on the carilbr
:al the principal stations on the line of the rail
rohds before the arrival of the cars, but distribu
tions fer the offices connected-with - the stations,
and therefore Inc' tally for the entire district
of country through which the lines are in opera
tion.
It Is believed thtt befare the end of the pres
ent month, this kind of poSt of will bo' ran
en five of the principal rollrmds of the United
States, besides the route between Washington
end New York, which was supplied with pmt
office rare several montks ago. Them retires - ids
ano.the• New York Boston, by way of New
Haven. Springfield and Worcester; the Hudson
River Railroad, between New York, Albany and
Troy; the New York Central. between Troy and
Buffalo; the New York it Erie, between New
York and Dunkirk; and the Pennsylvania Cen
tral, between Philadelphia and.Pittsburg,h. The
cars for these routes are probably already fur
nished? and It Is expected they will be in full
operation by the first of February. Their de
sign is eller the most approved plan, and were to
be ready by the 15th inat. •
The post-ollice authorities have been actively
engaged during the greater part of the year past
In snaking arrangements with the various roads
for the building and running of the post-office
care, Tho Work Is now so fir advanced as to so
cure the connection of the chief cities of the
North and East, and therefore a fair trial of the
railway Fostal system upon an extendel
When the new ears bt.gin, their trips on the
fovernl roads, such changes are to Le made in re
gard to the trains as will permit all the pout
office ears to be run in unison; and the mail
matter distributed no board, will ho taken dlrec.t
-ly from the cars of cacti of the lines to the cars
Of the other lines, and thus go forward with tbe
ordinary rapidity Of passenger travel.
Our city, which doe, not pes-ess the best of
postal facilities will be greatly benelltted,,,eVeu
by being provided with postollice ears on one of
Its routes, and It is to be Loped the system will
be adopted on other routes on which the citizeits
depend for their mall. Mall matter &email direc
tions would then reach its destination much
earlier thou now—in some cases several hours
sooner; but generally when the distance to be
levelled is a few hundred halm and more than
two offices are to be pasoel through, tire gain
will be a day; while regularity In the reception
of the mails will doubtless be secured in a great
er degree than at any timahltherto. New York
city. however, Is the centre of the system, do far
as it it ready to go Int o effect, and will, of course,
derive t.l4c greatest advantage from it.
From Chicago, railway postofilect are already
in operation. The country colt and west Is nt
present formed in two divisions, the boundary
icing considered earth and south from Indiana
polis; and cash division has its supcsintendent.
Special Agent Wheeler, of the Postoffice Depart
meet. is in charge of the eastern division. This
Includes the territory south to Washington, and
north to the lakes. Arrangements for the regu
lar connection of the system now having Its cen
tre at Chicago, mid the New York or Atlantic
system, are In coutemplallou, and will be put
Into effect at the convenience of the Depart
ment at Washington. .
Oil Intelligence
Mr. It. T. Morrison, of Perry township,. Artn
trong county, has sold to parties at Readinr„Pa.,
a small island, containing one and a half acres
In the Allegheny river near the month of the
Clarion, for the sum 0(111,530. lie also sold an 7
other island near the same place containing two
and a half acres, for $3,000. Mr. Fullerton Par
ker has sold ten acres on the Allegheny river,
south of the "Clarion and Allegheny River 011
Co.'s" land,for $7,000. Mr. Ellaha Roblason has
sold one acre of land on the same river, north of
the "Clarion and Allegheny River Oil Com
pany," on which there was an apparent oil
spring, for $l,OOO. 8. M. Robinson has sold ton
a"rca along the same river, north of the Fox-1
burgh Oil Company's well for $5,000. .We
learn that the farm of Mr. J oseph Thomas,near
Eldcrtou ' Annstrong county, has been leased
Ny.a Philadelphia. Company, who Intend to com
mence boring , for 12M The oil Indlcatlont
along the creek neat' Rattarthlng, are eal4 to be
very good.
The Paineville (Ohio) TeiegrcTh says the
cations of oil In that vicinity are such as to Jas-:
tify the belief of experienced oil men that It can.
be found in largo quantities, and it is clearly to
the. Interest of all, parties that the matter be•
thoroughly tested. 'A company has .been organ
ized there for the purpose of boring for oil.
Considerable excitement exists at Hoboken,
N. J., on account of the discovery of petroleum,
commencingun the western slope of the Pali
ssides, and extending, en far up ns Plormont.' It
Is stated that this section of country is directly
in the strata of the oil regions of Pennsylvania.
The Tioga County Agitator says the oil fever
bas broken out In several localities in that coun
ty, and may yet a s sume au epidemic form. Com
panies are forming for the purpose of boring.
Rumor. of discoveries of oil In Hantion's Bot•
tom, In the valley of the Juniata In the western
part of Bedford county are again revived. Pre
parations for boring are making on the premises
of Alva Boylen, in Juniata township.
Yesterday Morning was the coldest wo hare
bed this winter, and the freezing up of the
more exposed water-pipes caused, much in
convenience in different parts of the elty. In
the afternoon, however, the weather moderated,
and by evening It had become far more eon-,
genial to sensitive noses and cars. The snow
to still on the ground, but there are indications
that it will soon disappear. -Nearly everybody
is on "the rampage" for a sleigh•ride, and In
meet 'eases where the temperature of the weather
does not cool the ardor of those who would nava
hire, the livery bills will—from $lO to $l5 nor
day being charged for a tangle team; but .there
seem to be plenty of customers even at these
exorbitant rates. .
Death from Swallowlnea PM.
A young Iceman named Italia Coder, aged
eighteen years, and residing in Boale township,
Juniata county, died recently from the effects of
swallowing a pin. It appears that she had spin
In her month, and, falling asleep, awoke to find
It lodged somewhere in her throat. Ifedleinal
aid was summoned, but in. Taus. lihc lingimi
for severat days and expired, rellcrod,im doubt,
from am most excrntiating agony. What adds.
to the sadness of this unexpected death, is the
absence of both her father and brother In the
army. Women and 'children should be warned
against the dangerona habit of carrying pins In
:their Mouths.
Timms's Vaurgrnia.--Xr. Bmithe, - the new
manager of the Varieties, has just returned from
.New York, having secured savensl talented ar
tistee,, who will appear front time ~The
'.mostimlartant itequlalticrn. IfilleAnlta Zen
;fretta, denuiellSO and tight-rope, performer, wko
has jest returned from a enemata' tour through
!Mexico. She le said to be a wonderful perform
,fer, and makes her dna appearance this errentogi
ihlr.liCederick J.P.Thovitpsani
4eocalc incallet, said ether popular,pa-forraers,
;will also appear.` Gallant, a verr ancecia.•
ful actress, has . also been ; engaged, and Irukap 7
Tear daring the cnsuliak week., , . ~ •
,
Tdrarzater °mean ax Custweniti.7).—A getk
Gem= recent3y arrived trout Cumberland states
That thore .aro a host or °Mears: now .at that
place... Gen., Crooh Gan. and
eta, Gen; Dnval an& stair, and Gait. Hays Aud,
staff,' aro ncnt 'at that place, the point being' re l .
kartled as the most convenient for tha manage
ment Or the difrerefit conunande to which the 91*-'
ricers named have respectivelyheetc assigned. • •.
Mn. McKeon's Fcrasnar..—Thefituoral of Mr.
Eklehion (editor of the Dlepatch) whose death oc
curred on Thursday evening last, tookplaea froth
hie rcehience, on Penn tstreet, at one o'clock yes,
terday afternoon., A largoconcoureW citizens,:
together wititn,hody of the Masonic fraternity,
turned out to pm - feria the' last offices due loan ,
esteemed friend and brother: The funeral cor
tege sena An. nnuenally large one.,
EXALT...I'I)i -IN 7013NISTowir.—There are 101i113
twelve or linear oases of . smallpox lu Jolout.!
town, caused by r tlte 'arrival there of ttsmall , poi'
patient from the army. Meet ofithe. taws Ore
ouodited to the Flfth ward attd Cambitkelti..
REenrits„—A number or recniifq for the. 60th
Obto Infantry, pease(' b'th leye &er
on their way to l'etentn• en join
regiment. Tbey IrMrTertait ' In'Clneinnati
and 'Utility. •
.Orlyrox cr .Gzs. _
'Brig
=
GO%l 'Rowley, Rho comet
el, &mks for seleral idoatht 'part ha¢ ro-
Signed, aU 4 '5 lll-4 f tl Pt e P bll , nee ! ) il k 04 qty.-
_
ThE StreeticancntednihUtheir Irlkjelteraij
tR 1:1206t pette,Or tie but 'oll.' some of the
mute& IkyreeleheehearY to. etteetr Par konseiti ta"
Alou.Dicrixs, on, who lectured in this elty
couple of weeks ago, last week dcUrered three
lectures In billwankonto =wiled houses.
BIASITED IN 1786.
PRE
Second {yard . AUcgLnns
Ai an adjourned meetiud of the ciftnena of Lim
Second Ward, Allegheny, held January sth, for
the purr,e of presiding ways and means for
tilling the quota' of (ho draft, ordered by the
President of the United States in Drees:2l:er lait y
the following was adopted:
Ris6'red, That anFareutive Committee be ap
ointed for the purpose of appointang Block
Committees fur c dleefing money, enlist:an men,
and generally for transacting all the busliem
teseary for the purpose. or haring Meta pineal in
the service of the United Siatee tq fill said quota
of the ward. '
Under Fuld resolution tho following gentlemen
were appointed.
Captain T; SiorkdAle, Chairman:
Bees J. Thomas, EN. Treasurer.
S. N. Lightner, Esq., Secretary. '
William Omnibus, 'Esq.
Thomas Scandrett, Esq.
A. Leggelc, Esq.
Jestas lieu., Sec. pro tem.
ANYITVIISART.—Yestenthy, being the. 9th or
January, was the anniversary of the battle of
New Orleans, and as it oceurred,on ,liiunday, the
day Will be celebrated today hy . those who re
member with National pride the event. rt wilt
not, however, be on generally observed as for
merly, is the etent of the old battle at NeW'Or
leans has sunk Into'inslgnitleance, in comnerison
with many others of a more ramdt occurrence.
and of quite as much importikee. = ;
Accrnmvr.—On yesterday morning., n young
Ruin nstned Gallagher,' employed at the 'First
National Bank, had his arm broken near thg
wrist, by fulling, 'while 'walking on the side
walk along Fourth street. The boned .were set
by Dr. Tindle. The young man has been nether
unfortunate, haring bad the same arm broken .
before.
.SUTINCIOPTIONS TO GOV': ItNNENT
will be awl by reference to the published Hat,
that the subscriptions to the Government . luaus
at the Fourth 'National Bank have reached the
aggregate of nearly $1,000,000. There are .aev
ral lams" subscriptlens In the list published to
day.
Tim sren.—Meneger liendemen has effected
au ergamancet with Mr. tirade, a man welt •
known to the Ito :areal world, and he will mike
his lira appearance this eveningin the character
of "hamlet." The play Is a good one, and.well
calculated to bring out the lovers of the drama.
Effects of illicit Trade with the Insur—
rectionary Statei.--Letter of General
Canby. •
Major General Canby, in a letter on the sub
ject of trade with the insurrectionary Statese
Faye: if it is canted ou in the manner and to
the extent claimed by the spedulature who now
contwd it, the ineviteble result, Lo his judgment,
will he to add strength and efficiency to the, re
bel. armies east and west of the Mississippi river,
equlefilent to an addition of 50,000 men, and
will stimulate Into active opposition to the me
cessful prosecution of our • operations rat least
10,000 men within our Owe lines. The. cotton
speenlators to the Missiseippi Valley have a pros
pective hope to have an additional 'lnterest Cm
every bale of cotton within the rebel Meas.
They know that expeditions within the enemy's.
country are followed by the captuin' of cotton or
Its destruction by the rebels to &Ciente ifs flail
ing into our-hands. Hence it Is to. their interest
to give information to the rebels of every oatt
templated movement. lie has riot aeon an expe
dition into the enemy's lines without finding
agents of this character in communicallmwith,
the rebels, giving' them information regarding
our movetnents, and nearly every clip - edition has
been Soiled to mine extent in' some of Ina objects
by information so communicated. Ile has now
several speculators, captured In the enemy's
country, swatting trial for giving Information to
the enemy, but the punishment of these' men la
no compensation for the evil they have moi
stened, and will not!socure us from further Ma
natee from the same came:
The rebel armies cast and west of the Missis
sippi river have been supported mainly during
the last twelve mouths by the unlawful Arad*
carried on upon that river. The city of New Or
leans, elnce its occupation by iur forces, has con
tributed more to the support !the rebel army.
more to the purchase and eq Ipment of privp
teem that are preying upon oar commerce, and
more le maintain the credit of the ribelloveri
ment in -Europe, than any other port - an
country, with the single exception of Wilming
ton.
Gan. Canby makes this statement from (wi
den:6e. He does not doubt that many ,or the
...sons engaged is traffic cif theinsttriectlontucy
Stela are loyal and honOmble men, but he deer
know that many of the intermediate agents em
ployed are either rebels or
...unprincipled
men, - or actuated only . :by;: the Mattocks'
of gain. lie ,noW has papers; In — ealetfeii.:..:
to the contracts made by English -houses .In Mo
bile for the exportation of 900,000 bales
Of cotton by the way of New Orleans, thecondl
"non of the sale requiring the payments' to
made in supplies, in gold, or in foreign exchange..
The net proms of three transactions are estima
ted by the contractors themselves at $lO,OOO 000,
and It Is easy to see how much zeal wild 'be
evoked by Fonts of this magnitude. He cites
this as one of many Instances which bale wine
under his observation, am! to show the Ch3T3e
ter of the transactions In the Mississippi Palley
indicating the means by which our laws are
.evaded, and bow the amount doe the rebel Goy- -
aliment is converted Into foreign exchange. A.
numerous class follow in the track of the army,
traffic in its blood, and betray the cause for which.
It is fought, with all the baseness of Judas Isea
riot but without his remorse.
The letter, of which the above is an extract,
was to-day referred to the House Committee ma
Military Affairs, which has the entire subject
under consideration.
'Emancipation in Delaware.
Governor Cannon, in his annual message to.
the Legislature of Delaware, again takes - strong
ground In favor of emardpation In that State, as
ho
did in his Inaugural address. Ho repeats that
Delaware is connected with the free Staten by
geographical position and commercial neceesitnl
that the products of Delaware Una their markets
,
in the north, and that from thence come the ImP, -
grants who give luereaacel value to reai estate;
that the result of constant Intercourse with the
north Is gradually t 4,1 assimilate the inatituthstri
of Delaware to H of the free States ' uit has
already identified their interests; that slavery ha
Delaware, being merely nominal, Is worthleits tut.
an Clement of labor; that emanclpatieh In Itary
`land has surrounde d Delaware with treason, la.;
slang the escape of slaves on all aides, as there
is now no law requiring their•rendition. ,• •
In view of these facts, It might be ,presunial
that the Legislature' would eau the necessity of
taking some steps to retrieve the fortunes of the
'commonwealth by emancipating the alsvotoud.,
thereby Inviting free emigration: Bat cottstitte
ted as that Legislature la, of a majotity-Of"Dens•
oerats," we are ' Inclined to fur that the . •
cling dasperatelYto the forlorn and bepricia ,
stitutlon while &Mired of it ren:taint '
Weak as elavery In •Delaware lice beenlbr ten •
years pact, yet free principles have made mach
lees progress therelthan In 'Maryland; "Dflisouri,
Arkansas and Louisiana. • It Is helcion to as aa •
element of Democratic strength, and for no other t
reastio that we can percelve.—/Vill. 41f. Americas—
American and liritlM Narks.
-The Loudon Shipping aaallf
to a good deal of uneasiness In regard ta
grass ot the Anierican'tsavy. It says • '
The American's kayo raised their nary tq thvG r
of a first-rate perwer'r and this: one /kat aloner l
ahould make us look more eloaelt thau . Wento , \
our oast. Inst.sadofoorreets beligorenrkorre.,
It ' , cleft that we are ally* siSay bchbtd
United States in tron.clads. • , . t
.. .
It concludes Its observations es folio= ::,, ..,." i.
, Loid Paget says that we have oow,- ballt.ikr:i
building, thirty armorplated ildps; but ttdulals.i.
comparatively small fleet ne compared 40 what.. :r
the Pederalsylll shortly have. Between the '
con'- i
flitting claims of the turret and Other priaelphs,,...
the numerical superlealty of our fleets should not
'-' ';
be lost si g ht 0r ... The Americana ace building
some largo :vessels., imeelally dcsigebi ~,,,,e urs ,Li. ,
the. buttleat gnus yet . invented, looking' to - this:lr
Steaming, sailing and s ,
', tublilty.of the ehmscazoli4
Itt li
not to .their.impen ItyShot or bolts i of.:. ‘ t
300,1100 and. COO Ibto- to be tired from l t he gala ..,i
of this !Icel.. If the s ea of iron 'fun*" Can be - - ' i
penetrated' by abet from th'e genrof alroodfin,:.;
oblp, :tilt? we shall nave to
.M - POrimeetallici
. . .
. .
Tit*, macs:dial portion of test - aril:dispatch.' •
ruldtesied. Ur. Curdwell,Britisligoloalei Aso—
Mary; to Loot, Xerek, on. Vie stibJectOf.Confe&;.;
eratiou;is in the follovriag wurdif ( lierlfajes,;
ty's.Government hate given to your dlijiatch; ,:
and-to the resoluticiii the Conference, their '
•
Most deliberate - C o n sideration : They hate . rei •
garded them is a whola, and no haring been
signed by those nhohavellareed tbetn,"to.estab=
llsh a tompkte. and'..perfeet - , *idea of ther'•
*hole Loth one Government; as the circuit:mans: •
tee of th . acase, and a due consideration of:ettl6..
lag Infcresta would admit, They accept Alion2.,
i.hcrefore; as being, la the deliberate .jadgment.,,
of -theta best qualified to '4lecidp 'upon thesu
ject of the best framework of a measure • to bet •
yhmed,by the Imperial Tarlbuaeut for attidattlit
that recatdeelrable Moult.. •
Tun lig acco uiisOf the wounded Col
by;rddidned by our ,co,uta areas follows: "par
ball by
. whipb he was gbunded bas Wien Cdtratt. ,
ed. It hartogpassed around his andomcin sad
r#40,1 iv bpi right thigh: - On New
lit . ear's Day
he was bring cone 111 asitagX , from'
"Salem towards ?tarragon pike. Bra persona
who saw him report him 25 . 1:pitting blood: sad:
the ladle!' that ho Minot llre appoars bo goner ;